Secretary Griswold Applauds Signing of First-in-the-Nation Fake Electors Bill into Law
Denver, April 22, 2024 - Secretary of State Jena Griswold’s priority legislation, False Slates of Electors (HB24-1150) has been signed into law. This is the first enacted bill in the nation to expressly criminalize efforts to use fake electors schemes to overturn a state’s electoral results.
“Trying to steal an election through fake electors schemes is now a crime in the State of Colorado,” said Secretary Griswold. “I am proud that we are the first state in the country to expressly criminalize these efforts. Thank you to Governor Polis, Representatives Garcia and Parenti, and Senator Hinrichsen for making a clear statement that stealing an election is unacceptable in Colorado.”
The bill was sponsored by Representatives Lorena Garcia and Jennifer Parenti and Senator Nick Hinrichsen.
Fake electors schemes were central to the attempt by Donald Trump and his allies to steal the presidency in the 2020 General Election. Seven states have conducted criminal investigations of the individuals who participated in this scheme. Not every state was able to prosecute fake electors and those they conspired with because there was not a clear criminal law on the books.
HB24-1150 prohibits:
- Participating in a coordinated effort to subvert Colorado’s legitimate election results by replacing the electoral college voters with imposter electors who would cast a vote for a candidate who did not actually receive the highest votes;
- Conspiring or agreeing to participate in a plan to create an alternative slate of presidential electors;
- An individual from knowingly and falsely swearing the oath for presidential electors, or persuading someone else to;
- Creating, signing, or filing a list of false presidential electors with specified state or federal entities.
This legislation holds bad actors accountable by:
- Clearly establishing the crimes surrounding ‘fake elector’ schemes in election statute.
- Providing a penalty framework for such crimes, including up to a $10,000 civil fine.
- If convicted, bars participants from running for or holding public office in the State of Colorado.
Read the bill HB24-1150 on the Colorado legislature’s website